sede edp

EDP among the 157 companies that call on European leaders to reinforce environmental goals

Tuesday 15, September 2020
Corporate
Sustainability

More than 150 large companies and investors, including EDP, have signed a letter to ask European leaders for greater ambition in environmental targets - reducing greenhouse gas emissions by at least 55% by 2030 is one of them.

More than 150 European businesses, investors and business networks, including EDP, Microsoft, IKEA, Deutsche Bank, Unilever, H&M, Google, EDF, Signify and Apple are calling on EU leaders to back the ambition set out in the European Green Deal and reduce greenhouse gas emissions by at least 55% by 2030. In an open letter, delivered this Tuesday, September 15, several proposals are listed, among which is the call to the leaders of the European Union (EU) to support the ambition established in the European Green Agreement (Green Deal) and the reduction of emissions.

The disclosure of this document takes place in the week when the European Commission meets to discuss proposals for a new 2030 emissions target and on the eve of the State of the Union speech scheduled for this Wednesday.

CEOs from across Europe and the economy have outlined in this letter their determination to work with the EU to tackle impacts of the Covid-19 pandemic while delivering a more climate-resilient and regenerative recovery. The letter indicates the diversity of European business support for increased climate ambition, with companies from sectors including, manufacturing, heavy industry, finance, consumer goods, power generation and technology supporting the 55% target.

Signed by 157 businesses and investors, and 21 business networks, the letter states: "What we urgently need to see next is an ambitious implementation of the recovery package focussed on achieving a green and digital transition, with the European Green Deal at its core and an elevated short-term emissions reduction target in its sights.”

Plus: “The right decisions now can help create and protect healthy, thriving and fair communities and secure a roadmap for a prosperous economy. From a business and investor perspective, clarity on the net zero transition pathway and timetables for each sector, as well as policy that enables substantial investments in carbon neutral solutions is essential. This in turn would provide us with the confidence needed to invest decisively at the necessary pace and scale to reduce emissions, create decent green jobs, drive innovation, and accelerate the rebuilding of a resilient zero carbon economy."

For Miguel Stilwell de Andrade, interim CEO of EDP, “climate science and civil society are in total agreement - we need faster action on climate change starting from now. The regulatory direction set by the EU has delivered huge growth in areas like renewable energy and we must keep up the policy momentum if we want to see similar changes in areas like transport, heat and heavy industry. We’ll support policymakers every step of the way to a Net Zero world by 2050”.

Anticipate climate challenges

Together, ahead of Commission President Ursula von der Leyen State of the Union 2020 speech, and in the run up to Climate Week in New York, the signatories are urging European leaders to avoid the worst effects of climate change and secure a sustainable, competitive economic recovery by:

▪ endorsing the ambition set out in the European Green Deal;

▪ submitting resilient recovery plans which enable the green investments needed to deliver climate neutrality;

▪ agreeing a clearly defined target to reduce domestic greenhouse gas emissions by at least 55% by 2030 and associated objectives.

This initiative is led by the European Corporate Leaders Group (CLG Europe), a cross-sectoral group of European businesses working towards delivering climate neutrality.

It was delivered in partnership with Business Ambition for 1.5C , the We Mean Business coalition which includes BSR, The B Team, CDP, CLG Europe, Ceres, WBCSD, The Climate Group and its RE100 & EV100 networks, as well as with the Institutional Investors Group on Climate Change (IIGCC). There was additional support from European business and investment networks including BCSD Portugal, the Centre of Energy Efficiency Solutions (Slovenia), the European Alliance for Green Recovery, EU-ASE, EURIMA, EIIF, EHPA, The Aldersgate Group (UK), The Haga Initiative (Sweden), Skift Business Climate Leaders, the Solar Impulse Foundation, The Spanish Green Growth Group (Spain) and Wind Europe.

The complete letter and the list of signatories can be found here.